Recipe video above. For One-Pot-Pasta Cynics (and Italian cooking pursists), there's a special message for you at the top of the post! :)This recipe is everything you love about Spaghetti Bolognese - the rich, thick tomato sauce, full flavoured (never bland!), made from scratch WITH the pasta in one pot! Excellent big batch cooking, keeps well. Tomato passata (aka tomato puree) is the key here for an instant thick, rich sauce rather than cooking down crushed tomato.Pasta types - long, short or tiny, but read recipe note 4 for adjustments.
Prep Time10 minutesmins
Cook Time20 minutesmins
Course: Dinner, One Pot
Cuisine: Italian-esque, Western
Keyword: bologese sauce, Meat sauce, One Pot Pasta, Spagetti Bolognese
Saute onion & garlic: Heat oil in a large pot over high heat. Cook garlic and onion for 2 minutes until translucent.
Cook beef: Add beef and cook, breaking it up as you go.
Add tomato: Once beef has all changed from red to brown, add tomato passata.
Rinse out bottle: Pour some beef stock into the empty bottle, shake, then pour into the pot.
Add everything else: Add remaining beef stock and all remaining ingredients except spaghetti. Give it a good stir, then let it come up to the boil.
Add spaghetti: Add pasta, fanning it out around the pot. Leave for 30 seconds to start softening, then start pushing it in under the liquid.
Cook pasta: Once fully submerged, cook for 12 minutes, stirring every minute or so, and more towards the end. At about the 8 minute mark, lower the heat to medium otherwise the base might catch (but ensure it is still bubbling gently - you don't want pasta just bloating in warm water).
Remove from stove, toss well: Take it off the stove once the pasta is JUST cooked, the tiniest bit firmer than you want, and when still saucy. Toss it for about 30 seconds or so - the sauce will reduce further, the pasta will finish cooking.
Serve immediately, garnished with parmesan.
Notes
General notes:
If you scale recipe down, use a large saucepan and break long pasta in half
1. Tomato passata - pureed, strained pure tomatoes, sometimes labelled Tomato Puree in the US. Readily available in Australian supermarkets nowadays, alongside pasta sauces. More info about passata here.Key ingredient in this recipe for a rich, smooth sauce in this speedy Bolognese recipe. Usually, we use crushed tomato and let it simmer for a while (or hours!) so it breaks down.2. Beef stock - alternative is to use 3 crumbled beef stock cubes or 3 tsp powder plus water.3. Italian herb mix - this is a handy shortcut, using a premix. Anything labelled "Italian herbs" or "herb mix" is fine here. Or make your own with equal portions of dried parsley, oregano, rosemary and thyme (if you have at least 3 of these). More options for similar flavour combos:
Dried Thyme only - 1 tsp
Dried thyme 1 tsp + rosemary 1/4 tsp
Dried thyme 1 tsp + 1/2 tsp oregano
Fresh - sprig of rosemary + 3 sprigs thyme, plonk in and fish out before serving.
Just fresh thyme (not just rosemary - too strong)
Still worth making if you have none of these :) Herbs just add an extra touch of tastiness!4. Pasta options:Long - fettuccine, linguine, bucatini - thicker pasta will take longer to cook. - follow recipe as written but then adjust at end by adding BOILING water 1/2 cup at a time and continuing to cook/stir until pasta is cooked through.Short - ziti, penne, macaroni, spirals, rigatoni - requires less tossing to cook pasta through evenly and ensure they don't stick together, so use less liquid - reduce to 2 1/2 cups of beef stock and add an extra pinch of saltTiny - orzo/risoni, ditalini, kiddie novelty pasta like alphabet - Use this One Pot Bolognese Risoni recipe5. Storage / make ahead: Keeps well because it's nice and saucy, so it doesn't go dried out and stodgy the next day. Refrigerate up to 4 days, then reheat in microwave. Will freeze ok but if you're looking for a pre assembled Bolognese type thing to freeze, I highly recommend Baked Spaghetti Bolognese (it's made for freezing).6. Nutrition per serving, assuming 5 generous servings, including pasta.